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Hi, Dan,
"Dan Best" wrote in message ... Skip Gundlach wrote: *documentation - at the moment, the boat is a FL registered, not documented, Skip, This should be a non-issue. Our Tayana was CA registered when we bought it. Getting it documented was just a matter of filling out a form and sending it in along with a simple copy of the state ownership certificate ("pink slip"). When the state registration came up for renewal, I just sent it back along with a note stating the boat had been documented and a copy of the documentation certificate and haven't heard from them since. We don't anticipate any issue whatever - other than a benefit to us of a thoroughly searched title and resolution of any issues which may remain as a product of the death of one of the owners (I'm still bothered by the listing continuing to trumpet this as an estate sale, but the lister asserting it to be free and clearly the property of an attorney not deceased). I agree that you should get IN WRITING a statement that says either that no more gear will be removed or listing what gear currently on board will not be included in the sale. I'll eagerly await same :{)) On the tax issue, be aware if you don't pay FL tax, your state may demand it. CA works that way, though there is an way to avoid it as long as you take delivery and keep the boat out of the country for a specific period and can document the fact that not only was this so, but that you actually used it (it's not enough to just let it sit in a marina). I don't know if just having it worked on would satisfy our state tax collector or not (let along, yours). Our situation will clearly fit, I believe. Both the US and British Virgin Islands brokerages make a big deal out of 'no sales taxes in the Virgin Islands' in their ads. Since that is where we'll have our hailing port and documentation, and proceed directly to (well, with a rather long journey in between to see the islands through which we'll pass and not likely return to see later), where we live now won't even know about it, I don't figure. In the case of FL, they have rather stringent requirements about documenting your removal from the state (20 days max to leave, 30 days to submit documentation of same via dockage, fuel purchase, or something else out of state, with the boat clearly identified on the receipt), and if it never comes to my state, I think we'd be doubly clear there. Best of luck - Dan Heh. Thanks. As much effort as went into the search, this one is a lot tougher for me. There's entirely too many places this can fall apart, and all of them are expensive to discover. A prior wise-guy thread about the 'real' cost of the boat identified some of the costs we've incurred. All of the prior costs combined won't equal the costs of the discovery process on this boat... L8R Skip and Lydia, by proxy -- "And then again, when you sit at the helm of your little ship on a clear night, and gaze at the countless stars overhead, and realize that you are quite alone on a great, wide sea, it is apt to occur to you that in the general scheme of things you are merely an insignificant speck on the surface of the ocean; and are not nearly so important or as self-sufficient as you thought you were. Which is an exceedingly wholesome thought, and one that may effect a permanent change in your deportment that will be greatly appreciated by your friends."- James S. Pitkin |
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